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‘Tina, come home' – husband's appeal to wife who was buried in their house

‘Tina, come home' – husband's appeal to wife who was buried in their house

'Tina, come home. There's nobody mad at you. My arms are open. The pets are missing you.'
Tears fill the eyes of Richard Satchwell as he appeals to his wife of 27 years to contact him, three months after she had allegedly disappeared from their home in Youghal, Co Cork.
In the Crimecall appeal, the 58-year-old looks directly into the camera and pleads: 'I just can't go on not knowing. Even if you just ring the guards, let people know that you are all right.'
The programme, which aired in June 2017, was one of more than a dozen media appearances in which Satchwell spoke extensively about the morning he claimed Tina left the house and never returned.
Within months of his wife going missing, Satchwell, a truck driver, had convinced her family that she had deserted him, taken 26,000 euro of their savings and had assaulted him throughout their marriage.
Her family were left angry, worried and confused as they tried to make sense of her disappearance and the person Satchwell had described as violent. It was not the Tina they knew.
Within a week of murdering his wife, Satchwell had placed her body in an unplugged chest freezer, which was kept in the shed at the back of the property in Grattan Street.
He then dug a hole, measuring almost one-metre deep, under the stairs of their three-storey home. Tina's body, still wearing her pyjamas and dressing gown, was then wrapped in a black plastic sheet and placed inside the hole with her head facing down.
On Friday, March 24 2017, a 'not overly emotional' Satchwell walked into Fermoy Garda Station to report that his wife had left him and he had not seen her in four days.
Garda Conor Casey suggested making a missing person report, but Satchwell said she was 'OK'.
It was more than seven weeks after Tina disappeared that Satchwell formally reported her missing to gardai, and her case was upgraded to a missing persons case.
Satchwell set out a story to Garda James Butler that he would stick by for almost seven years.
The claims led to a lengthy investigation, which began with a search of his home in June 2017.
The search, which lasted for around 11 hours, did not find anything of significance.
Over the 12 months following Tina's disappearance, Satchwell embarked on a media campaign in which he spoke extensively to TV and radio journalists about Tina and the day she left their home and their marriage.
According to Satchwell, it was love at first sight.
He was 21 years old when he first laid eyes on Tina, a 17-year-old from Fermoy, who had moved to Coalville, near Leicester in England.
She had moved to live with her grandmother and Satchwell's brother was a neighbour.
Satchwell said they 'clicked' and they were together ever since.
A broadcast interview played to the jury shows Satchwell taking a journalist around his home, meeting their pet parrot, Valentine. He also shows a dusty unopened bottle of Cava he bought for their anniversary.
During many of his interviews and 'exchanges of information' with gardai, Satchwell repeatedly told them he believed Tina left because of a deterioration in their relationship. But he also said he believed she would return home.
He also claimed she would have violent outbursts that she would direct at him, and spoke about his wife's 'dark side'.
He claimed he gave up a lot in his life to be with her. She did not want children but he did, he claimed.
He told gardai that he and Tina were best friends, and spent hours and hours talking each night, about nothing specific.
Images of his house after Tina disappeared revealed a home that had dog faeces on the floor, unwashed dishes lying in the kitchen sink and a birdcage that had not been cleaned for a while. There was also a cement mixer in the sitting room.
Satchwell later admitted that he slept on bed sheets that had not been washed in years.
An upstairs room was full of clothing and clothing racks, all belonging to Tina.
By June 2017, detectives suspected that Tina may have been injured or 'incapacitated by a criminal event'.
Inconsistencies also began to emerge in his story.
A forensic accountant said that the couple would not have been able to save 26,000 euro that he claimed she took the morning she left.
CCTV and phone location data also revealed that he was not in Dungarvan on the morning of March 20.
Emails on a laptop seized from his home showed that the couple had been trying to buy two marmoset monkeys from an international monkey rescue organisation.
An email had been sent on the morning of March 20 claiming to be from Satchwell himself.
It later emerged that he had offered Tina's cousin the chest freezer he had used to store her body for a number of days.
Years passed with no updates or sightings of missing Tina.
Then in August 2021, Superintendent Annmarie Twomey was appointed senior investigating officer, and along with Detective Garda David Kelleher from Cobh Garda Station, she familiarised herself with the case.
She identified new lines of inquiry and came to the conclusion that Tina had met her death by unlawful means and was not a living person.
Investigators obtained a court search warrant and on October 10 2023 gardai arrested Satchwell and began an extensive search of his home.
He repeated the same story about her disappearing from their home with 26,000 euro on March 20 2017, claiming she never returned.
He was released the following day, but just hours later the decomposed remains of his wife were found buried one metre underground, beneath the stairs.
Suddenly, his story changed.
He said that on the morning of March 20 2017, he had been up early in the morning and was working on a plumbing issue in the shed.
At around 9am, the two dogs came into the shed, which, he said, meant that Tina was up.
He went inside and found his wife in her dressing gown scraping at the plasterboard with a chisel. He asked her what she was doing and she suddenly flew at him with the chisel.
He said he lost his footing and fell backwards, and she was on top of him trying to stab him in the head with the chisel.
All he could do to protect himself, according to Satchwell, was hold the dressing gown belt to her neck.
He then held Tina's weight off him with the belt and within a matter of second, she 'falls limp and collapses into my arms'.
His denial of the charge was ultimately rejected by the jury who found him guilty of murder.

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Garda Commissioner Drew Harris said that 'in hindsight' it may have been 'very obvious' where Mrs Satchwell's remains were secretly buried. Mr Harris said a report would be compiled and given to the Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan on Mrs Satchwell's disappearance, while the case of Mr Gaine is undergoing a peer review. Earlier this week, Richard Satchwell was given a life sentence for the murder of his wife Tina at their home in Co Cork. The British truck driver, 58, had denied murdering his wife between March 19 and March 20 2017. The jury at the Central Criminal Court in Dublin reached the unanimous verdict last Friday after nine hours and 28 minutes of deliberations. Mrs Satchwell's skeletal remain were found in a clandestine grave under the stairs of the couple's home in Co Cork in October 2023, more than six years after her husband reported her missing. The house was subject to a search in 2017, however nothing was discovered. In a separate case, the remains of Mr Gaine, a farmer from Co Kerry, were discovered in a slurry tank on his farmland in May, two months after he was reported missing by his wife. The farmyard had been previously searched as part of the probe. Speaking about the investigation into the disappearance of Mrs Satchwell, Mr Harris said the 2017 search did 'harvest' a 'huge information', which was useful in the re-examination of the case. Speaking at the Garda College in Templemore, Co Tipperary, Mr Harris said: 'All of those were crucial. So I would say the initial investigation was hamstrung because of the lack of information in comparison to the later re-examination of this matter. 'There's far more information to hand which gave us real grounds then for actual suspicion and then inquiries that we could lead. 'When you look at hindsight, some of these things can seem very obvious, but in the moment, what was known, what was being said in terms of sighting, what was being said in terms of the victim by her husband, and one has to recognise the victimology that was being applied here. 'His suppression of her, the coercive control that obviously she was subject to for many years, her isolation in that particular community, that meant that there was very few other people that we could speak to her… what Tina Satchwell's life was like. 'It was a complex investigation. Yes, the house was searched in 2017, forensic scientists also accompanied that search, it was subject to thorough examination and looked for blood splatter, none was found.' He said the initial investigation will be subject to a review. 'We have the expertise within the organisation, and obviously, then we report to the minister and to the Policing and Community Safety Authority, as is our responsibility. 'But I do think there are definitely lessons that we wish to learn from all of these homicides, where it's missing persons and then converts some time later to a homicide investigation.' He added: 'What I can say is, we've already reviewed all our missing person reports nationally. That was done last year. We found no other suspected homicide cases. 'Then following the Michael Gaine investigation, we're subjecting that to peer review, as I do think there's learning for us around those who would commit crime and then attempt to dispose of the body, and often are successful in disposing of the body.'

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Tina's family said the trial had taken a physical toll on them and it was difficult to hear her name 'tarnished' in court during the trial. The British truck driver, 58, had denied murdering his wife between March 19 and March 20 2017. The jury at the Central Criminal Court in Dublin reached the unanimous verdict last Friday after nine hours and 28 minutes of deliberations. On Wednesday at the sentencing, Tina's sister and niece paid tribute to her as a kind and gentle woman who loved animals. Referring to her using her maiden name Dingivan, they described the distress of having Tina's name 'tarnished' during the trial and the 'appalling' manner in which she was buried. In her victim impact statement, Tina's sister Lorraine Howard said thinking about the way Satchwell buried her sends 'shivers down my spine every time I think about it'. 'He treated Tina's body with such disrespect. He showed Tina's dog in death more respect by getting the dog cremated and making a shrine.' She said she and Tina had been inseparable growing up, and although they had a falling out, she said that they would have made up and become best of friends again if Satchwell had not 'stole that from us'. 'Richard Satchwell stole that from many people even before he murdered Tina, by isolating her and alienating her from many friends when she was alive,' she told the court. She said she has nightmares about Tina's final moments and what she went through. 'He wanted Tina where he could still have the ultimate control – within his home under the stairs.' She said that the narrative from Satchwell that Tina had been violent 'couldn't be further from the truth' and said the trial had taken a physical toll on her, her mother and their family. She said the trial was already 'unbearable' but the mention of her brother's suicide made 'an already horrendous situation worse' and was 'intolerable' for the family. 'I will never be able to forgive Richard Satchwell for what he has done,' she added. Tina's niece Sarah Howard said that her aunt was murdered 'by someone who claimed to love her' and that she could not understand how someone who was 'supposed to love and protect her could do something so cruel'. She said that listening to Tina's name being 'tarnished' during the trial was difficult and said the 'undignified' way in which Tina was buried caused her 'huge amounts of distress'. She said that Tina would have loved to go wedding dress shopping with her and would have been an 'incredible' support when her baby was born. She said she had to leave her newborn baby girl to give evidence in the trial. She also said she was 'horrified' to discover that the chest freezer Satchwell had offered her was used to put Tina's body in. 'To hear this just horrified me – to think I could have taken it into my family home and used it. What sort of person (could) do that? 'I ask the court – consider not just the crime but the cruelty that followed it and the deception, the stolen years and the false hope he gave us all that one day she might turn up.' Satchwell appeared in court on Wednesday in a light blue shirt. His barrister Brendan Grehan SC told the court that Satchwell intends to appeal, and that he insists he 'never intended to kill Tina'. Mr Grehan also said that Satchwell said 'despite anything he said in the trial, Tina was a lovely person'. Before the sentencing hearing, Tina's mother Mary Collins was seen carrying a brightly coloured bouquet into the courthouse. The court heard previously that the couple married in the UK on Tina's 20th birthday, and later settled in Co Cork, first in Fermoy before moving to Youghal in 2016. The trial heard that on March 24 2017, Richard Satchwell went to gardai and claimed his wife had left their Youghal home four days ago because their relationship had deteriorated. Satchwell also claimed Tina had taken 26,000 euros in cash from savings they kept in the attic, which the court later heard they did not have the capacity to save. He formally reported his wife missing in May 2017 and claimed to investigators that his wife was sometimes violent towards him. In the following years, he made over a dozen media appearances in which he spoke extensively about the morning he claimed Tina left the house and never returned. After her remains were found buried under a concrete floor under the stairs in their home in October 2023, Satchwell claimed to gardai that Tina 'flew' at him with a chisel. He further claimed that to protect himself, he held a dressing gown belt to her neck before she went limp. His denial of the charge was ultimately rejected by the jury who found him guilty of murder. Outside the Criminal Courts of Justice after sentencing, Superintendent Ann Marie Twomey said that the investigation team were 'happy that justice has been served for Tina'. 'We are thankful that this investigation has provided answers and a sense of justice for Tina's family and the wider community,' she said. 'While no resolution can erase the pain of loss, we sincerely hope that the conclusion of this case brings some measure of comfort to Tina's family. 'We extend our deepest gratitude to the witnesses in this case and all of those who assisted us throughout the investigation. Your assistance formed an essential part of the journey. 'We would like to acknowledge the support of the wider community, especially those in Fermoy and Youghal. 'Finally, we the investigation team, are happy that justice has been served for Tina.'

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